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Jane Bernstein

    Jane Bernstein crea una prosa che si addentra nelle profondità dell'esperienza umana, esplorando temi di perdita, memoria e ricerca di identità. Il suo stile è spesso lirico e introspettivo, bilanciando attentamente la riflessione personale con verità universali. Bernstein sviluppa i suoi personaggi con una profonda comprensione dei loro mondi interiori, spingendo i lettori a considerare le complessità della connessione umana e la resilienza dello spirito. Il suo lavoro è una testimonianza del potere della narrazione nel scoprire ed elaborare le nostre emozioni e i nostri pensieri più profondi.

    Rachel - die Welt mit der Seele sehen
    Erstarrte Gefühle
    Second Lives
    The Face Tells the Secret
    • The Face Tells the Secret

      • 315pagine
      • 12 ore di lettura

      Everything has been hidden from Roxanne G.--her birth name, her sister, her family history--until her "boyfriend" tries to ingratiate himself by flying in her estranged mother from Tel Aviv. That visit is the start of a tumultuous journey, in which she first learns about a profoundly disabled sister who lives in a residential community in the Galilee and later begins to unearth disturbing long-held family secrets. The process of facing this history and acknowledging the ways she's been shaped by it will enable Roxanne to forge the kinds of meaningful connections that had for so long been elusive. In this way, The Face Tells the Secret is the story about a woman who finds love and learns how to open herself to its pleasures. The Face Tells the Secret is also a story that explores disability from many angles and raises questions about our responsibility to care for our kin. How far should Roxanne go to care for the wounded people in her life--her mother, her sister, the man who professes undying love? What should she take on? When is it necessary to turn away from someone's suffering?

      The Face Tells the Secret
    • Second Lives

      Tales From Two Cities

      • 264pagine
      • 10 ore di lettura

      What is a city? Do people make cities or do cities make people? And can cities have second lives? We all inhabit cities, but what do they mean to us? What do we mean to them? Is the city a real thing in the 21st century? How do we integrate their pasts to their futures? What are the threats facing cities in the western world? These are just some of the questions posed by the fascinating studies in this book. Through essays, poems, psychogeography, short stories, and more, an array of today’s leading writers and thinkers join together to look at cities in the western world. Focusing on the two former industrial heartlands of Glasgow and Pittsburgh, this international and diverse collection is asking the big questions and getting the most creative answers. From Will Self’s psychogeography of Glasgow, to National Book Award winner Terrance Hayes’ stunning poetry, this collection will make you think, feel, fear, and fight for what part cities play in our daily lives. Bold, diverse, and daring, these pieces are a must for anyone who cares about where we live and what it means to live in the urban sprawl of now. Will Self, Jane Mccaffery, Edwin Morgan, Ewan Morrison, Terrance Hayes, Allan Wilson, Louise Welsh, Kapka Kassabova, Gerald Stern, Doug Johnstone, Lori Jagielka, Hilary Masters, David Kinloch, Yona Harvey, Sharon Dilworth, Lee Gutkind, Richard Wilson, and many more.

      Second Lives